Click
on any photo to enlarge





 |
VFP
Maine Chapter 001
Marching in Memorial Day Parade
in Brunswick, ME on May 29th, 2006
Valor
at My Lai
On this Memorial
Day, Maine Veterans for Peace commemorate the rare courage of a single individual
acting from conscience, compassion and sense of humanity to save innocent
civilian lives. The Maine VFP parade float depicts the decisive moment when
Warrant Officer Hugh C. Thompson, Jr. confronted superior officers and fellow
U.S. soldiers, and at great personal risk to his life, forced a halt to
the killing at My Lai. For this singular act of doing what was right, Hugh
Thompson would suffer ostracism, even vilification for decades to come from
the military, politicians and, indeed, much of America.
Photos courtesy of Peggy Akers, Dud Hendrick and Carole Whelan
|

Opinion
Vietnam war hero
letters@TimesRecord.Com
05/31/2006
To the editor:
At the Brunswick-Topsham Memorial Day Parade, which honored Vietnam Veterans,
Maine Veterans for Peace had a float depicting the heroism of Warrant Officer
Hugh Thompson who stopped the slaughter at My Lai.
Along the parade route, an older woman in black was trying to hand out leaflets
explaining his heroic actions, only to be hounded by a young man saying
the leaflet dishonored Vietnam veterans. Because of this, many people refused
it. So I quote from the leaflet so they can judge for themselves who dishonored
whom:
"On the morning of March 16, 1968, when Charlie Company did a sweep of My
Lai, they found only a small peasant village, the reported Viet Cong 48th
Battalion nowhere to be seen. Frustration soon turned to rage and though
not a shot was fired at them, the soldiers of C company went on a rampage,
gunning down old men, women, children and even babies. Families huddling
together for safety in huts or bunkers were shown no mercy, dragged out,
shot, their bodies thrown in ditches. Within three hours, some 500 Vietnamese
were killed in cold blood.
"Flying a reconnaissance mission in an OH-23 Raven Helicopter, Chief Warrant
Officer Hugh C. Thompson, with his door gunners Glenn Andreotta and Lawrence
Colburn, landed at My Lai, coming upon a ghastly scene of dead, dying and
horribly maimed bodies. The three men began setting markers near Vietnamese
who appeared to be still alive, only to see C company soldiers, under the
orders of Lt. William Calley, begin shooting the wounded marked for evacuation.
"Outraged, Thompson put his chopper down in direct line of fire between
the troops and the wounded villagers and told Calley to hold his men there
while he called in helicopters to evacuate the wounded Vietnamese. Thompson
then ordered his crew chief to train the copter's M60 heavy machine guns
on the soldiers and 'open up on them' if they fired at the civilians.
"When the first rescue helicopter landed, Thompson had 11 civilians, including
five children, flown to the nearest army hospital. Later he returned to
rescue a baby still clinging to her dead mother."
Do Thompson's actions dishonor Vietnam veterans, or do they honor the true
American spirit of courage, compassion and humanity? It is a return to pagan
barbarism when murdering innocents is honorable and trying to save lives
is dishonorable.
Luckily, it was only one poor soul who trashed the leaflets. Thousands of
other parade watchers viewed the Maine Veterans for Peace quietly or with
sustained applause as they marched past with their banner unfurled, "ABOLISH
WAR."
Herschel Sternlieb,
Brunswick
Turned backs on peace
letters@TimesRecord.Com
05/31/2006
To the editor:
The most moving moment of the Brunswick-Topsham Memorial Day parade was
the appearance of the Veterans for Peace and the Peaceworks group marching
near the end, asking for the abolishment of war. It was very heartwarming
to see the rousing support the group received as it passed by; but it also
was disturbing to see the negative responses, especially from some of the
Christian groups in the crowd.
Members of one church organization angrily turned their backs on the peace
activists to show T-shirts proclaiming, "We believe in the gospel." That
really surprised me, because Jesus asked us to be prepared to give up our
own lives for peace, to turn the other cheek rather than fight back. To
love all, even the enemy. Yet here were so-called Christians turning their
backs on those asking for peace. I was amazed.
Although there might be many of us who believe there will always be wars
and we should stay vigilant with a strong defensive force, my hat goes off
to those brave patriots who marched at the end of the parade — against the
tide of blind patriotism and nationalism — to remind us there still is an
ultimate goal, an aspiration of honest religious proportions, that of true
peace.
Peyton Higgison,
Brunswick
|